The War on Poverty is the unofficial name for legislation first introduced by United States President Lyndon B. Johnson during his State of the Union address on Wednesday, January 8, 1964. This legislation was proposed by Johnson in response to a national poverty rate of around nineteen percent. The speech led the United States Congress to pass the Economic Opportunity Act, which established the Office of Economic Opportunity
(OEO) to administer the local application of federal funds targeted
against poverty. The forty programmes established by the Act were
collectively aimed at eliminating poverty by improving living conditions
for residents of low-income neighborhoods and by helping the poor
access economic opportunities long denied them.
As a part of the Great Society, Johnson believed in expanding the federal government's roles in education and health care as poverty reduction strategies. These policies can also be seen as a continuation of Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal, which ran from 1933 to 1937, and the Four Freedoms of 1941. Johnson stated, "Our aim is not only to relieve the symptom of poverty, but to cure it and, above all, to prevent it".
The legacy of the war on poverty policy initiative remains in the continued existence of such federal government programs as Head Start, Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA), TRiO, and Job Corps.
Deregulation, growing criticism of the welfare state, and an ideological shift to reducing federal aid to impoverished people in the 1980s and 1990s culminated in the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act of 1996, which President Bill Clinton claimed: "ended welfare as we know it."
Major initiatives
- The Economic Opportunity Act of 1964 which created the Community Action Program, Job Corps and Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA), centerpiece of the "war on poverty" – August 20, 1964
- Food Stamp Act of 1964 – August 31, 1964
- Elementary and Secondary Education Act – April 11, 1965
- Social Security Act 1965 (Created Medicare and Medicaid) – July 19, 1965
The Office of Economic Opportunity
was the agency responsible for administering most of the war on poverty
programs created during Johnson's Administration, including VISTA, Job Corps, Head Start, Legal Services and the Community Action Program.
The OEO was established in 1964 and quickly became a target of both
left-wing and right-wing critics of the War on Poverty. Directors of the
OEO included Sargent Shriver, Bertrand Harding, and Donald Rumsfeld.
The OEO launched Project Head Start as an eight-week summer
program in 1965. The project was designed to help end poverty by
providing preschool children from low-income families with a program
that would meet emotional, social, health, nutritional, and
psychological needs. Head Start was then transferred to the Office of Child Development in the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (later the Department of Health and Human Services) by the Nixon Administration in 1969.
President Johnson also announced a second project to follow
children from the Head Start program. This was implemented in 1967 with Project Follow Through, the largest educational experiment ever conducted.
The policy trains disadvantaged and at-risk youth and has
provided more than 2 million disadvantaged young people with the
integrated academic, vocational, and social skills training they need to
gain independence and get quality, long-term jobs or further their
education. Job Corps continues to help 70,000 youths annually at 122 Job Corps centers throughout the country. Besides vocational training, many Job Corps also offer GED programs as well as high school diplomas and programs to get students into college.
Results and aftermath
In the decade following the 1964 introduction of the war on poverty,
poverty rates in the U.S. dropped to their lowest level since
comprehensive records began in 1958: from 17.3% in the year the
Economic Opportunity Act was implemented to 11.1% in 1973. They have
remained between 11 and 15.2% ever since.
It is important to note, however, that the steep decline in poverty
rates began in 1959, 5 years before the introduction of the war on
poverty (see figure 4 below).
A 2019 National Bureau of Economic Research paper found that
according to Johnson's standard of poverty, the poverty rate declined
from 19.5 percent in 1963 to 2.3 percent in 2017.
The 'absolute poverty line' is the threshold below which families
or individuals are considered to be lacking the resources to meet the
basic needs for healthy living; having insufficient income to provide
the food, shelter and clothing needed to preserve health. Poverty among
Americans between ages 18–64 has fallen only marginally since 1966, from
10.5% then to 10.1% today. Poverty has significantly fallen among
Americans under 18 years old from 23% in 1964 down to less than 17%,
although it has risen again to 20% in 2009. The most dramatic decrease in poverty was among Americans over 65, which fell from 28.5% in 1966 to 10.1% today.
In 2004, more than 35.9 million, or 12% of Americans including
12.1 million children, were considered to be living in poverty with an
average growth of almost 1 million per year. According to the Cato Institute,
a libertarian think tank, since the Johnson Administration, almost $15
trillion has been spent on welfare, with poverty rates being about the
same as during the Johnson Administration. A 2013 study published by Columbia University asserts that without the social safety net, the poverty rate would have been 29% for 2012, instead of 16%. According to OECD data from 2012, the poverty rate before taxes and transfers was 28.3%, while the poverty rate after taxes and transfers fell to 17.4%.
Nixon attacked Job Corps as an ineffective and wasteful program
during his 1968 presidential campaign and sought to substantially cut
back the program upon taking office in 1969.
The OEO was dismantled by President Reagan in 1981, though many of the
agency's programs were transferred to other government agencies.
According to the Readers' Companion to U.S. Women's History,
Many observers point out that the war on poverty's attention to Black America created the grounds for the backlash that began in the 1970s. The perception by the white middle class that it was footing the bill for ever-increasing services to the poor led to diminished support for welfare state programs, especially those that targeted specific groups and neighborhoods. Many whites viewed Great Society programs as supporting the economic and social needs of low-income urban minorities; they lost sympathy, especially as the economy declined during the 1970s.
United States Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare under President Jimmy Carter, Joseph A. Califano, Jr. wrote in 1999 in an issue of the Washington Monthly that:
In waging the war on poverty, congressional opposition was too strong to pass an income maintenance law. So LBJ took advantage of the biggest automatic cash machine around: Social Security. He proposed, and Congress enacted, whopping increases in the minimum benefits that lifted some two million Americans 65 and older above the poverty line. In 1996, thanks to those increased minimum benefits, Social Security lifted 12 million senior citizens above the poverty line ... No Great Society undertaking has been subjected to more withering conservative attacks than the Office of Economic Opportunity. Yet, the war on poverty was founded on the most conservative principle: Put the power in the local community, not in Washington; give people at the grassroots the ability to stand tall on their own two feet. Conservative claims that the OEO poverty programs were nothing but a waste of money are preposterous ... Eleven of the 12 programs that OEO launched in the mid-'60s are alive, well and funded at an annual rate exceeding $10 billion; apparently legislators believe they're still working.
Reception and critique
President Johnson's "war on poverty" speech was delivered at a time
of recovery (the poverty level had fallen from 22.4% in 1959 to 19% in
1964 when the war on poverty was announced) and it was viewed by critics
as an effort to get the United States Congress to authorize social welfare programs. Republicans ran against the War on Poverty program.
Some economists, including Milton Friedman,
have argued that Johnson's policies actually had a negative impact on
the economy because of their interventionist nature, noting in a PBS
interview that "the government sets out to eliminate poverty, it has a
war on poverty, so-called "poverty" increases. It has a welfare program,
and the welfare program leads to an expansion of problems. A general
attitude develops that government isn't a very efficient way of doing
things."
Adherents of this school of thought recommend that the best way to
fight poverty is not through government spending but through economic
growth.
Prof. Tony Judt,
the late historian, said in reference to the earlier proposed title of
the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act that "a more
Orwellian title would be hard to conceive" and attributed the decline in
the popularity of the Great Society
as a policy to its success, as fewer people feared hunger, sickness,
and ignorance. Additionally, fewer people were concerned with ensuring a
minimum standard for all citizens and social liberalism.
Conservative Research Fellow at the Independent Institute
James L. Payne followed this line of thinking when he wrote that "the
war on poverty was a costly, tragic mistake [because]...abolishing
poverty did not seem far-fetched to the activists ... [and] it was a
perspective that led to intolerance ... The simple economic theory of
poverty led to a single underlying principle for welfare programs ... In
adopting the handout approach for their programs, the war-on-poverty
activists failed to notice – or failed to care – that they were ignoring
over a century of theory and experience in the social welfare field ...
The war-on-poverty activists not only ignored the lessons of the past
on the subject of handouts; they also ignored their own experience with
the poor."
Economist Thomas Sowell
also criticized the war on poverty's programs, writing "The black
family, which had survived centuries of slavery and discrimination,
began rapidly disintegrating in the liberal welfare state that
subsidized unwed pregnancy and changed welfare from an emergency rescue
to a way of life."
Others took a different tack. In 1967, in his book Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community? Martin Luther King
"criticized Johnson's war on poverty for being too piecemeal", saying
that programs created under the "war on poverty" such as "housing
programs, job training and family counseling" all had "a fatal
disadvantage [because] the programs have never proceeded on a
coordinated basis...[and noted that] at no time has a total, coordinated
and fully adequate program been conceived." In his speech on April 4, 1967 at Riverside Church in New City, King connected the war in Vietnam with the "war on poverty":
There is at the outset a very obvious and almost facile connection between the war in Vietnam and the struggle I, and others, have been waging in America. A few years ago there was a shining moment in that struggle. It seemed as if there was a real promise of hope for the poor –both black and white – through the poverty program. There were experiments, hopes, new beginnings. Then came the buildup in Vietnam and I watched the program broken and eviscerated as if it were some idle political plaything of a society gone mad on war, and I knew that America would never invest the necessary funds or energies in rehabilitation of its poor so long as adventures like Vietnam continued to draw men and skills and money like some demonic destructive suction tube. So I was increasingly compelled to see the war as an enemy of the poor and to attack it as such. Perhaps the more tragic recognition of reality took place when it became clear to me that the war was doing far more than devastating the hopes of the poor at home.
This criticism was repeated in his speech at the same place later
that month when he said that "and you may not know it, my friends, but
it is estimated that we spend $500,000 to kill each enemy soldier, while
we spend only fifty-three dollars for each person classified as poor,
and much of that fifty-three dollars goes for salaries to people that
are not poor. So I was increasingly compelled to see the war as an enemy
of the poor, and attack it as such." The next year, King started the Poor People's Campaign
to address the shortcomings of the "war on poverty" and to "demand a
check" for suffering African-Americans which was carried on briefly
after his death with the construction and maintenance of an encampment,
Resurrection City, for over six weeks. Years later, a writer in The Nation remarked that "the war on poverty has too often been a war on the poor themselves," but that much can be done.
In 1989, the former executive officer of the Task Force on
Poverty Hyman Bookbinder addressed such criticisms of the "war on
poverty" in an op-ed in The New York Times. He wrote that:
Today, the ranks of the poor are again swelling ... These and other statistics have led careless observers to conclude that the war on poverty failed. No, it has achieved many good results. Society has failed. It tired of the war too soon, gave it inadequate resources and did not open up new fronts as required. Large-scale homelessness, an explosion of teen-age pregnancies and single-parent households, rampant illiteracy, drugs and crime – these have been both the results of and causes of persistent poverty. While it is thus inappropriate to celebrate an anniversary of the war on poverty, it is important to point up some of the big gains ... Did every program of the 60's work? Was every dollar used to its maximum potential? Should every Great Society program be reinstated or increased? Of course not ... First, we cannot afford not to resume the war. One way or another, the problem will remain expensive. Somehow, we will provide for the survival needs of the poorest: welfare, food stamps, beds and roofs for the homeless, Medicaid. The fewer poor there are, the fewer the relief problems. Getting people out of poverty is the most cost-effective public investment."
In March 3, 2014, as Chairman of the Budget Committee of the House of Representatives, Paul Ryan released his "The War on Poverty: 50 Years Later"
report, asserting that some of 92 federal programs designed to help
lower-income Americans have not provided the relief intended and that
there is little evidence that these efforts have been successful.
At the core of the report are recommendations to enact cuts to welfare,
child care, college Pell grants and several other federal assistance
programs.
In the appendix titled "Measures of Poverty", when the poverty rate is
measured by including non-cash assistance from food stamps, housing aid
and other federal programs, the report states that these measurements
have "implications for both conservatives and liberals. For
conservatives, this suggests that federal programs have actually
decreased poverty. For liberals, it lessens the supposed need to expand
existing programs or to create new ones."
Several economists and social scientists whose work had been referenced
in the report said that Ryan either misunderstood or misrepresented
their research.